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105 [vol. 7, p. 238. “L’État.” Originally published as a draft dated 11–15 June 1848, in the first issue of Jacques Bonhomme.1 “There are those who say, ‘A financial man, such as Thiers, Fould, Goudchaux, or Girardin, will get us out of this.’ I think they are mistaken.” “Who, then, will get us out of this?” “The people.” “When?” “When the people have learned this lesson: since the state has nothing it has not taken from the people, it cannot distribute largesse to the people.” “The people know this, since they never cease to demand reductions in taxes.” “That is true, but at the same time they never cease to demand handouts of every kind from the state. “They want the state to establish nursery schools, infant schools, and free schools for our youth, national workshops for those that are older, and retirement pensions for the elderly. “They want the state to go to war in Italy and Poland. “They want the state to found farming colonies. “They want the state to build railways. “They want the state to bring Algeria into cultivation. “They want the state to lend ten billion to landowners. 1. This piece is a rough draft of Bastiat’s best-known pamphlet, “The State,” published in September 1848 (see “The State,” pp. 93–104 in this volume. For more details on Bastiat’s journalistic activity during the revolution of 1848, see “Bastiat’s Political Writings: Anecdotes and Reflections,” pp. 401–7 in this volume.  8  The State (draft) 106 The State (draft) “They want the state to supply capital to workers. “They want the state to replant the forests on mountains. “They want the state to build embankments along the rivers. “They want the state to make payments without receiving any. “They want the state to lay down the law in Europe. “They want the state to support agriculture. “They want the state to give subsidies to industry. “They want the state to protect trade. “They want the state to have a formidable army. “They want the state to have an impressive navy. “They want the state to . . .” “Have you finished?” “I could go on for another hour at least.” “But what is the point you are trying to make?” “This. As long as the people want all of this, they will have to pay for it. There is no financial man alive who can do something with nothing.” Jacques Bonhomme is sponsoring a prize of fifty thousand francs to be given to anyone who provides a good definition of the word state, for that person will be the savior of finance, industry, trade, and work. ...

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